Longest website and Longest page

Q: How BIG and LONG is
this page?A: This page is 9 quadrillion pixels wide by
9 quadrillion pixels tall. Thus it contains a large number of pixels:

8,100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000

otherwise known as 8.1 nonillion. In scientific notation,
that's 8.1x10^30, hereafter shown in the form 8.1e30.

This means that the repeating background image has 5.4e28
stars on it-- about as many as there would be if our
universe was multiplied to a million times it's current observable size.

Futhermore, at 77 pixels to the inch, this
page takes up 3.4e18 square miles and is 1.844 billion miles on a side--
an area roughly equivalent to a section of the plane of our Solar System with
the sun at the center and the orbit of Saturn on the outside edge (a square
22 AU on a side). That's about 17 billion times the surface area of the Earth.

Test it for yourself. Using the arrow keys to scroll,
see if you can move the scroll button even one pixel. On second thought, don't--
especially if you're the doggedly persistent type. To do so will take about
seven times longer than. Biggest website in the world. how fast can you scroll ?

Let us exaggerate outrageously and say that a trillion
books might have been written during the history of the world (a figure more
in line with all reading that has ever been done), and that each of
those trillion books has an extremely generous allotment of 10,000 pages.
Let us then say that each of those pages has an average size of about one
square foot. That would mean that this webpage would have ten trillion times
the space necessary to fit it all in.

If you were to do a random search of this webpage at a
rate of ten pageviews per second, it would take you about 31,000 years-- on
average-- before you would find even a single page of even one
of those books.

The World Wide Web is currently the biggest part of the
internet-- and it is huge.

Google currently knows of over 8 billion webpages-- and
there are certainly a great many pages that Google does not know about. There
are an unknowable number that have come and gone and will never be seen again.

Let us imagine that there have been a total of a twenty
billion webpages each year since 1990-- a gross overestimation (at least in
regard to the early days).

Let us then imagine that each of those webpages was at
least 25,000 pixels long and 1,000 pixels wide-- equivalent to about twenty-five
pages of writing.

Given these figures, this one page would have enough
raw area to house a quadrillion years worth of the World Wide Web.

If you were to search randomly at a rate of ten pageviews
per second, it would take you 3 million years-- on average-- to find even
just one of those twenty billion pages.

Would you like to visit the exact center?
(Only works properly with Mozilla Firefox)

your natural lifespan. This method causes you to "move"across the plane of this page at the equivalent
of a toddler's walking pace-- around 0.5 mph. At this rate, it would take
you half a million years to cross from one end to the other.

As you may know, it is enormously quicker to use the
mouse and click on the empty part of the scroll bar and then hold down the
mouse button. Using this method, you would be able to cross in about 100 minutes.
Doing so causes you to move at about Warp 1.5-- a virtual velocity of over
1.5 times the speed of light (ignoring relativistic effects). If you try it,
you'll see that the background starfield appears to be going by at no more
than ten miles an hour. In actuality, the glimpses you are seeing of the starfield
are tens of thousands of miles apart. Enormous expanses are being skipped
over completely.

Of course, it is far quicker to use the mouse to grab
the scroll button and slide it over. Not as quick as using this link, however:
To the Corner.

Note: While this page is very, very large when
viewed using Internet Explorer and others, you need Mozilla Firefox to view
it properly. Firefox is the open-source phoenix of once-defeated Netscape.
It offers improved speed, security, and simplicity. It's tabs feature alone
makes it worth switching.

The largest web page in the world and longest web page, biggest websites in the world

From Oslo, Norway to Granada, Spain with Love ;) --Håvard Østby
Largest page on the web, biggest page on the internet
Worlds biggest webpage, longest web page and biggest web page in the world
Author John Malkov